I know that in crafting things, I like to show off all the details and touches that make what I made special. The lovingly-aligned pattern, or the perfectly custom fit bust, or the fact my hands and feet stick out the ends. Sometimes, though, you just need a thing, so you make the thing.
That's the story with these. They're the Portlander Pants pattern from New Horizons, which seems to have been renamed Pattern Niche since I bought it, and they're delightfully simple. cut out 4 leg pieces, optional patch pockets, and a waistband. assemble in the way you would assume them to be done. hem the bottom. DONE.
I work from home, and honestly, I'm more and more focused on comfort over adorability, especially now that I work from home full-time now. No one but the cats cares what pants I'm wearing. So I've spent most of the last 2 years in 2 pairs of pants I made from this pattern. Which is... not enough pajama pants, judge me as you will. 
So, when I got the grey knit for my tank-top dress, (which I will write up once I have a chance to wash and take photos of), I also got a bit of black knit for a new pair of PJs.
Being me, I absolutely decided the correct time to sew them up was during a heat wave, when John was out of town, because what's cooler and more relaxing than sewing? (trick question). So the whole effort was just a bit slap-dash. the pattern pieces were laid out "close enough" to on-grain, they were sketched around with chalk ,and then cut in my lap while I watched youtube. When I came up about an inch short of fabric width (because I do not even now how), I overlapped two pieces and split the difference. NO ONE WILL EVER KNOW BUT YOU AND I, INTERNET. I eyeballed seam allowances "That's about 3/8ths, right?", I eyeballed hem lengths, I added a tag so dumb morning me can stop getting her pants on backwards.
This has to have been the most lazy piece of sewing I've ever done. And you can't really tell, looking at the finished product, because they're just knit pj pants, and they're stretchy, and fit perfectly (after I took 2" off the length, of course, because even when comfy, it's nice to have feet, and to not get your pants stuck in your wheely chair wheels.)
It was really refreshing to have something to make that just... wasn't about getting something perfect. About appreciating the imperfections. "That top stitching made a wobbly pocket? meh, it'll hold my phone, so good enough". Give it a try, you might like it!